​US warns Damascus against interfering with its ‘aerial assets’ in Syrian airspace

The Pentagon is yet to officially acknowledge the downing of a surveillance drone over ISIS-free territory controlled by the Syrian govt, but scarce details of the incident hint at US involvement going beyond its self-mandated anti-ISIS plan in Syria.

Anonymously, US military
sources have confirmed that the country has lost contact with one
of its drones over Syria, after SANA news agency reported Syrian
government forces shot down a hostile drone in Latakia province.
Sources however did not reveal the cause of the incident.

At about 1740 GMT, US military controllers “lost contact with
a US MQ-1 Predator unarmed remotely piloted aircraft operating
over northwest Syria,” a US defense official said in an
email Tuesday. “At this time, we have no information to
corroborate press reports that the aircraft was shot down. We are
looking into the incident and will provide more details when
available.”

US State Department’s spokeswoman said on Wednesday that there
was no “confirmation at this point.”

“I can confirm, as I’m sure you may have from the Pentagon,
and certainly they’d be the lead on this, that yesterday U.S.
military controllers lost contact with an unarmed
remotely-piloted aircraft operating over northwest Syria. The
Department of Defense is looking into the incident, will provide
more details when available,” Jen Psaki said.

“We, of course, reiterate our warning to the Assad regime not
to interfere with US aerial assets over Syria,” she added.

At the same time two US officials, speaking to Reuters,
acknowledged that the Predator drone was likely shot down,
although the investigation continues. A Syrian military source
told the publication that the drone has been brought down with a
“rocket.”

“The plane was American-made, was brought down coming from
the sea, and the Syrian air defense was the one that brought it
down,” the Syrian military source told Reuters.

Meanwhile another source told AFP that the drone was not
immediately identified as being American, but was shot down as
any hostile aircraft would be.

“As soon as it entered Syrian air space, we considered it to
be gathering security and military information on Syria's
territory,” the source in Damascus said. “The aircraft
entered areas where Daesh (ISIS) is not present.”

The fact that no Islamic State fighters are present in Latakia
was also confirmed by the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights. They say the drone was shot down in Al-Maqata, a village
near the provincial capital of Latakia.

“There are no opposition fighters or jihadist groups anywhere
in that area, but there is a large presence of regime
forces,” said Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman.

In fact, the province is known to be the stronghold of a
stronghold of the Alawite minority in Syria and the Assad family.
Based on that, some Arabic sources speculated that the Predator
was carrying out recon for a possible assassination mission, and
was flying from Jordan, whose bases are being used by US allies
against ISIS.

The MQ-1 Predator is an unmanned aerial vehicle, which the US
army claims has gone missing, is used by the United States Air
Force and Central Intelligence Agency. While the Predator carries
cameras and other sensor equipment for surveillance mission, it’s
armed modifications can carry and fire AGM-114 Hellfire missiles,
as demonstrated during numerous combat missions in Afghanistan.

Last August, President Obama ordered “limited strikes”
against ISIS in order to protect American personnel in Iraq. One
month later, Obama announced he was broadening the military
campaign to “destroy” the Islamic State and prevent its
advance into neighboring territories, including Syria.

Since the start of the bombing campaign, US drones have
undertaken both surveillance and strike missions in Iraq and
Syria as part of Operation Inherent Resolve. If confirmed, the
incident would become the first downing of a US aircraft since
the beginning of the campaign.

Syria did not formally consent to the strikes on its territory,
claiming that operations without Damascus’s coordination is a
violation of sovereignty. “Any action of any kind without the
consent of the Syrian government would be an attack on
Syria,” said at the time the national reconciliation
minister, Ali Haidar.

“I think it is totally appropriate that the Syrian
governments shows its sovereignty over its airspace,” Antony
Hall, a professor at Lethbridge University told PressTV.

However the US authorities, who have long been demanding Assad’s
unconditional resignation, insist that his power is illegitimate,
thus claiming there was no need for military coordination with
Damascus.